Tumgik
#charles siringo
unidentifiedprimate · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Jeffrey Combs as Charles Siringo
Butch vs. Sundance, 2023
99 notes · View notes
60zcowboy · 11 months
Text
fuck it, i’m enthralled by the oldass yeehaw detective man
Charles Siringo (Butch Cassidy and the Wild Bunch & Butch Cassidy vs Sundance) imagines
• he doesn’t really like the nickname Charlie, he’d much rather be called Charles or Detective Siringo, the only person he actually enjoys hearing call him Charlie is you
• he’ll whittle u little trinkets and stuff, he’s definitely whittled u a figurine of ur favorite animal
• he loves to play chess. if you don’t know how to play, he’d be happy to teach you. he’s very good at it and won’t let you win on purpose, so if/when you do he’ll be proud of u!
• he also loves to tell u about his experiences and adventures while tracking down whatever outlaws he’s encountered. you’ve convinced him to write them down and work on publishing a book about them too
• because of the nature of his job, he’s on the move a lot and working constantly, as a result the best time in a day for you is at night before bed, because it’s the time when he finally can relax and you can both be together. so much for his claim about not sleeping.
• if you want to work with him on the job, it’ll take a lot of coaxing as he never wants to see you put in danger. But to be fair, he’ll admit that he’s not had a lot of luck with his previous fellow lawmen and he knows he can trust you completely, so he’ll eventually agree to put you on the job
11 notes · View notes
wellwhatdoiput · 3 months
Text
u never realize how much u genuinely despise a character until you have to write an essay on why they’re important
2 notes · View notes
Text
Combstober Day 9
Prompt: Hands
Character: Charles Siringo (Butch Cassidy and The Wild Bunch/Butch Vs. Sundance)
Warnings: NSFW
Tumblr media
You watched closely as Charles's hands worked expertly to carve a knight out of wood. His nimble fingers shaved the last bits of wood away from his carving before he was finally satisfied, blowing the remaining wood shavings away before he admired the piece more closely. And you couldn't help but lick your lips as Charles swirled his fingers around the piece. 
It was maddening, you thought as you watched him place the piece onto his chess board. How could something as simple and mundane as your husband's hands get you so hot under the collar? It was ridiculous, clenching your thighs together just because his fingers can move so precisely and smoothly. Practically drooling as you watched him practice his favorite hobby, wood carving. 
Whether Charles hadn't noticed your obsessive staring or was simply ignoring you on purpose, you couldn't tell. That was, until he let out a chuckle and finally looked away from his precious chess board. 
"Are you going to sit there staring or are you actually going to do something?" 
The mocking tone in Charles's voice didn't surprise you. More often than not, when he knew you were hot and bothered, he spoke to you in a teasing way. Sometimes he bordered on cruel, though he never offended you. His words had the opposite effect on you, really. Which was why when he looked at you with that smirk you felt your thighs twitch. 
"I'm not sure what you're talking about." You responded coyly, raising your chin defiantly. 
Charles stared at you, his eyes piercing your soul as he seemed to weigh your words. 
"Don't play coy with me, darlin'. We'v been together too long for that to work on me." Charles reminded you, his stern tone making you chew on your bottom lip. 
You couldn't bring yourself to look him in the eyes again. Not only because you were embarrassed, but because even without looking up you could feel his gaze, which was so intense it sometimes felt like he was looking past you. And you had no intention of looking up at Charles anytime soon, until the sound of his chair creaking made you look up. 
Charles stalked toward you, his intense stare never leaving your body as he walked to your side of the table and circled the chair you were sitting in. His hand grazed the back of your chair before finding your shoulder, his hand on your right side while he leaned down to whisper into the ear on your left side. 
"If you wanted me so bad, all you had to do was ask." He said, his voice perfectly balancing husky and gentle.
You sighed deeply, and your eyelids fluttered as Charles's hands slowly moved from your shoulders to your neck, not squeezing or grabbing but simply caressing. Having a man so powerful and intimidating be so gentle with you definitely sent you on some kind of power trip, seeing as how your confidence level went up just enough to get you to turn around, looking Charles in the eyes. 
"Are you going to actually do something about this, or just keep teasing me?" You asked softly. Charles's eyes lit up as he registered your words, and his gentle grip on your neck became noticeably less gentle. 
"I'll see what I can do."
13 notes · View notes
kwebtv · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Mrs. Sundance - ABC - January 15, 1974
Western / Drama
Running Time: 90 minutes
Stars:
Elizabeth Montgomery as Etta Place
Robert Foxworth as Jack Maddox
L.Q. Jones as Charles Siringo
Arthur Hunnicutt as Walt Putney
Lurene Tuttle as Mrs. Lee
Claudette Nevins as Mary Lant
Lorna Thayer as Fanny Porter
Robert Donner as Ben Lant
Alvy Moore as Mr. Spence
6 notes · View notes
monkeyssalad-blog · 1 year
Link
0 notes
aiiaiiiyo · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
1899-1900, Charles Siringo & W.B Sayers, Pinkerton Cowboy Detectives, on the trail hunting down the wild bunch gang. [860x600] Check this blog!
7 notes · View notes
mudwerks · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Charles A. Siringo. A Texas Cow-Boy; or, Fifteen Years on the Hurricane Deck of a Spanish Pony, Taken from Real Life by Chas. A. Siringo, an Old Stove Up "Cow Puncher" Who Has Spent Nearly Twenty Years on the Great Western Cattle Ranges. Chicago: M. Umbdenstock, 1885. First edition. 8vo. 316pp... 
34 notes · View notes
reedflutes · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
the old west, part 2 (1, 3)
A Texas Cowboy, Charles Siringo, 1886 Ranch Life and Hunting-Trail, Theodore Roosevelt, 1888 Ten Years a Cowboy, C. C. Post, c. 1898 Rhymes From a Round-Up Camp, Wallace David Coburn, 1903
1 note · View note
unidentifiedprimate · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media
Jeffrey Combs as Charles Siringo
Butch vs. Sundance, 2023
50 notes · View notes
1340fatboy · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
OLD WEST LAWMEN Charles Angelo Siringo (February 7, 1855 – October 18, 1928), was an American lawman, detective, bounty hunter, agent for the Pinkerton National Detective Agency during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Siringo was born in Matagorda County, Texas, to an Irish immigrant mother and an Italian immigrant father from Piedmont. He attended public school until he was 15, when he started working on local ranches as a cowboy. In March, April and May 1877, Siringo was in Dodge City, Kansas, during an alleged confrontation between Clay Allison and Wyatt Earp, who was a deputy marshal at the time. Earp later claimed, after Allison's death in 1887, that he and Bat Masterson had forced Allison to back down from an impending confrontation. Siringo, however, later gave a written account of that incident which contradicted Earp's claim, stating that Earp never came into contact with Allison, and that two businessmen, cattleman Dick McNulty and the owner of the Long Branch Saloon, Chalkley Beeson, in Dodge City actually defused the situation. Siringo stopped herding to settle down, got married in 1884 and opened a merchant business in Caldwell, Kansas. He began writing a book titled A Texas Cowboy; Or Fifteen Years on the Hurricane Deck of a Spanish Pony. A year later, it was published, to wide acclaim, and became one of the first true looks into life as a cowboy written by someone who had actually lived the life. In 1886, bored with the mundane life of a merchant, Siringo moved to Chicago, where first-hand observation of the city’s labor conflict (which he attributed to foreign anarchism) moved him to join the Pinkerton Detective Agency, using gunman Pat Garrett's name as a reference to get the job, having met Garrett several years before. With 2,000 active agents and 30,000 reserves, the forces of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency were larger than the nation’s standing army in the late 19th century. The Pinkertons provided services for management in labor disputes, including armed guards and secret operatives like Charles A. Siringo. He was immediately assigned several cases, which took him as far north as Alaska and as far south as Mexico City. He https://www.instagram.com/p/B8yjICYIbhxfAdfSiMDG-f4hDFKQllIHyvwZ8Q0/?igshid=g0o9h2ufe97j
0 notes
rosemaryja-blog · 7 years
Text
The Story of Billy the Kid - C. Stephen Badgley & Charles A. Siringo | History |648117413
The Story of Billy the Kid C. Stephen Badgley & Charles A. Siringo Genre: History Price: Get Publish Date: May 13, 2013 The true life of the most daring young outlaw of the age. He was the leading spirit in the bloody Lincoln County, New Mexico war. When a bullet from Sheriff Pat Garrett’s pistol pierced his breast he was only twenty-one years of age and had killed twenty-one men, not counting Indians. His six years of daring outlawry has never been equaled in the annals of criminal history. The facts set down in this narrative were gotten from the lips of "Billy the Kid," himself, and from such men as Pat Garrett, John W. Poe, Kip McKinnie, Charlie Wall, the Coe brothers, Tom O'Folliard, Henry Brown, John Middleton, Martin Chavez, and Ash Upson. All these men took an active part, for or against, the "Kid." Ash Upson had known him from childhood, and was considered one of the family, for several years, in his mother's home. Other facts were gained from the lips of Mrs. Charlie Bowdre, who kept ''Billy the Kid” hid out at her home in Fort Sumner, New Mexico, after he had killed his two guards and escaped.
1 note · View note
senkyosakki-blog · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
The Story of Billy the Kid - C. Stephen Badgley & Charles A. Siringo | History |648117413
0 notes
sherryharper-blog · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
The Story of Billy the Kid - C. Stephen Badgley & Charles A. Siringo | History |648117413
0 notes
berthare-blog · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
The Story of Billy the Kid - C. Stephen Badgley & Charles A. Siringo | History |648117413
0 notes
beverlycoo-blog · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
The Story of Billy the Kid - C. Stephen Badgley & Charles A. Siringo | History |648117413
0 notes